Thank you for taking this bug on. If it was just a case of the snap
taking a long time it would be tolerable, but in some scenarios it just
hangs with the snap partially installed. This means the application
isn't installed, and now installing it isn't possible without resetting
snap to a consistent state.

So to answer your question of what a good user experience would be:

1. Ideally, the snap would just install regardless of whether apt or
snap initiated it. If I do `snap install chromium-browser` it works, but
`apt install chromium-browser` is hit and miss and takes considerably
longer to the point of timing out after 20 minutes. It's unclear why
this is so different when it appears that apt is just calling the snap
installation?

2. If the apt installation of chromium-browser fails, it should do so in
a way that the system doesn't now believe that it is installed, even
though the snap isn't available to run. As a result, the user could
simply try the installation again with the hope it succeeds the next
time, without needing to figure out how to get their system back into a
state where the installation can be reattempted.

I haven't tested the proposed solution, but if it works then I feel
giving the user prompts to deal with the issue appropriately is helpful,
but really is just a workaround. Ideally users shouldn't need to take
the steps mentioned and the package should handle it's own failure
scenarios appropriately.

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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1886414

Title:
  the chromium snap takes a long time to install without visible user
  feedback, seems stuck

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